Firefighter's children die in daycare fire while he's at false alarm call

WATCH: An Erie, Penn., firefighter, Luther Jones, lost three of his children in a daycare fire overnight on Sunday, while he was responding to another call. The fire killed a total of five children, including a nine-month-old baby boy.

Firefighters in a small Pennsylvania community are mourning for one of their own, after his children were among five youngsters killed in a daycare blaze while he was responding to another call.

Luther Jones dropped his two daughters and son off at the daycare in Erie, Penn., on Saturday before joining his crew at the Lawrence Park Volunteer Fire Department one town over, according to Fox News.

He was responding to another call when a fire broke out at the daycare early Sunday, just after 1 a.m. Jones’ call turned out to be a false alarm.

The neighbouring Erie Fire Department responded to the daycare call and pulled five young children and one adult from the blaze. All five children were later pronounced dead. Officials say the five victims ranged in age from eight months to 8 years old.

Two teens escaped the blaze through the roof of the home daycare, Fox News reports. The daycare operator, Elaine Harris, was taken to hospital in stable condition, Erie News Now reports.

Jones later learned that all three of his children were among the dead.

Firefighters in Erie, Penn., kneel in grief outside a home daycare where five children died in a blaze on Aug. 11, 2019.

Erie Firefighters/Facebook

“Organizationally and individually, we are heartbroken by the recent tragic fire in the City of Erie,” the Lawrence Park Volunteer Fire Department wrote in a statement on its Facebook page Sunday. “We are grieving deeply as this has affected one of our members.”

Jones has been a volunteer firefighter for 15 years, according to Lawrence Park Fire Chief Joe Crotty, who described Jones as an “outstanding young man.”

The Erie Fire Department offered its condolences to all the victims’ families in a statement on Monday.

“It is simply an unbearable loss for the families and for our community,” Len Trott, president of the Erie Firefighters’ union, wrote on Facebook. “This tragedy will linger in the memory of all involved for the rest of their lives, and we can only hope that the community can someday heal.”